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Militia and Volunteers of County Durham

The Militia and Volunteers of County Durham are those military units raised in the County independent of the regular Army. The "modern" militia dates from legislation enacted during the Seven Years' War. The volunteers had several forms and separate periods of existence until made a permanent body in 1859.

Militia edit

Durham Militia
 
Shako plate of the Durham Militia, 1850s from the Durham Light Infantry museum
Active1759—1908
Disbanded1953
CountryGreat Britain
United Kingdom
BranchMilitia
TypeInfantry
SizeOne Battalion to 1859
Two Battalions to 1908
EngagementsSecond Boer War

After the invasion scare of 1745, and the later strain on the regular army during the Seven Years' War, bills for the reform of the militia were brought to Parliament, but it was not until 1759 that the act would be passed (30 Geo. 2. c. 25).[1][2] The act continued with the ballot to select men from each county, in numbers based on a return made by the county authorities of men of eligible age, initially between 18 and 50 years of age. As a substitute could be made on payment of £10, the burden fell on the working classes.[3] Subsequent explanatory legislation was required to curb rioting in 13 counties over fears of pay and overseas service, the militia would only be used in England and Wales.[4] When not embodied (mobilised) for service the men had an annual training requirement of 28 days by 1762.[5] The Legislation was continually amended, for example, by the end of the Napoleonic wars, to permit wider service in the country, fixed terms of service and paying a bounty for volunteering for the regular army.[6]

The militia was under the control of the Lord Lieutenant of the county and was to be officered by the local gentry, their rank determined by a property qualification which was gradually reduced or ignored.[5][7]

General militia edit

 
Officer's coatee button of the Durham Militia c. 1850s from the Durham Light Infantry museum

The regiment of the Durham Militia did not form until 1759, it was led by Henry Vane, 2nd Earl of Darlington, and had an initial strength of 369 men, with the headquarters at Barnard Castle (the Vanes lived nearby in Raby Castle). The first bandmaster of the regiment was William Herschel.[2] The militia regiment in its early form was embodied on the following occasions:[8]

  • During the Seven Years' War from 22 February 1760 to early 1763, it served briefly at Pontefract,[9] where, in November 1761, it had a strength of 23 Officers, 16 Serjeants, 16 Drummers and 396 Other ranks formed in eight companies. The uniforms had green facings.[7]
  • During the American Revolutionary War from 26 March 1778 to 1783, when France had joined the Americans, it served locally in Scarborough and Whitby, and was composed of six companies.[10] It was ranked 44th in order of militia precedence by drawing of lots annually in June 1778, then 30th, 35th, 32nd and 44th.[11] The uniforms had purple facings.[12]
  • During the French Revolutionary Wars from end 1792 until May 1802 the regiment was tasked with maintaining order as well as anti-invasion duties and for this purpose they were employed outside of their area of recruitment and kept on the move so as to avoid fraternization with the local population.[13] On the death of Henry Vane in 1792, the regiment was led by his son William Vane, 1st Duke of Cleveland.[14] The regiment was moved at regular intervals, Whitby, 1793, where it had a strength of 289 all ranks, Scarborough, 1794, Morpeth and Alnwick, 1795, Yarmouth, 1796, where it had 14 officers, 20 serjeants, 20 corporals, 12 drummers, 375 privates. Then to Hull, 1797, where the establishment raised to 1300+, and the strength rose to 800 men, Burstwick camp, 1798, now 1200 men strong, where large numbers volunteer for the regular army, and by the end of 1799, the strength had fallen to 439 all ranks. Lastly, back to Yarmouth, 1800, Sunderland, 1801 and Barnard Castle in 1802 to disband.[15] For this whole embodiment it was ranked 10th in order of precedence, in lots drawn in 1793,[a] the uniform for which had buff or pale yellow facings.[7]
  • Less than a year later, after the short-lived Peace of Amiens, the regiment was once again embodied from March 1803 to August 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars, with an initial strength of 14 officers, 26 serjeants, 9 drummers, 401 rank and file,[16] and was ranked 25th in order of precedence in lots drawn in 1803,[11] the uniform had white facings.[7] The regiment was station in Hull, 1803, Chelmsford Barracks, 1804, escorting French prisoners to and guarding them at Norman Cross Barracks, 1805, Woodbridge Barracks, 1806, Portsmouth, 1808, where some 168 men joined the 68th Regiment and others the 43rd Regiment and the 53rd Regiment, they also suppressed a rising of prisoners on board a prison ship.[17] They stayed in Sunderland for two years, before moving North to Musselburgh, 1812, Perth, 1813 and Glasgow in 1814, returning to Barnard Castle to disband later that year.[18][b]
  • After Napoleon escaped from Elba the regiment was once more embodied from 14 July 1815 to 28 February 1816, it was much weaker with initially only 25 officers, 18 serjeants, 9 drummers, 156 rank and file. It served in Glasgow, where by the end of 1815 its strength had risen to 232 other ranks. The regiment was disbanded at Barnard Castle on 28 February 1816.[20]

The last annual training for balloted men was in 1825, and was held only once or twice in the next few years, as the militia was allowed to fall into disuse, and the Durham militia dwindled to only a small headquarters staff. At the end of 1833 this amounted to a captain, a serjeant-major (the captain's son), 12 serjeants, a drum-major and four drummers, and by 1844 was only the serjeant-major and six serjeants.[20] In 1840 the Colonelcy of the Durham Militia was held by William Vane, 1st Duke of Cleveland, and after his death in 1842 it passed on to his son Henry Vane, 2nd Duke of Cleveland.[20][21]

1852 Reformed Militia edit

 
Band boy's tunic button of the North Durham Militia c. 1860s from the Durham Light Infantry museum

In 1852 a new Militia Act was passed that revived the militia, and County Durham was ordered to provide 1096 men (or 2000 men including artillery[22]). However, with the ballot having been suppressed in 1830, the response was weak. The first recruits were trained in two batches at Barnard Castle at the end of the year.[23] In 1853 the existing Durham Militia was split into two regiments: the 1st (or South) Durham Militia, with its headquarters at Barnard Castle and the 2nd (or North) Durham Militia, headquartered in Durham. An artillery brigade of four (later five) batteries, the Durham Artillery Militia, was newly raised at Bishop Auckland in July 1853, moving its headquarters to Hartlepool in 1861.[23][22]

During the Crimean War both infantry regiments were embodied, the 1st regiment from December 1855 to May 1856, which remained at Barnard Castle and the 2nd regiment from March 1855 to May 1856, which spent the last few months at Burnley. Both were understrength, with a total of 630 man of all ranks between them.[23] neither were among those embodied during the manpower shortage caused by the Indian Mutiny. However, the Durham Artillery Militia were embodied during the latter stages of the Mutiny from 5 April 1859 to 25 March 1861, serving in the garrison of Gosport and Portsmouth.[22][24][25][26] In 1860 the 1st regiment was made a Fusilier regiment, the 1st Durham (Fusilier) Militia.[27] The revival of the Volunteer forces led to competition for the available manpower.[28] The rise of local constabularies meant that the militia would be used less for keeping order than to replace regular soldiers on home service during large mobilizations.[29]

Reforms and Amalgamation edit

New legislation increased ease with which militia officers and men could transfer to the regular army, and resulted it becoming, as Cardwell wanted, more of an auxiliary to the regular line regiments.[30] In 1881, after being brigaded with, but seldom interacting with, the Volunteer units of the County since 1873, the 1st Durham (Fusilier) Militia became the 3rd (Militia) Battalion and the 2nd (North) Durham Militia became the 4th (Militia) Battalion of the newly created Durham Light Infantry.[31] The 3rd battalion was embodied for six months in 1885, as a consequence of the Mahdist War, and was stationed at Colchester.[27]

The nation's Artillery Militia was reorganised into 11 divisions of garrison artillery in 1882, and the Durham unit, with a sixth battery, became the senior Militia unit in the new Northern Division, taking the title of 2nd Brigade, Northern Division, RA' (the 1st Brigade comprised the Regular RA units of the division). When the Northern Division was abolished in 1889 the title was altered to The Durham Artillery (Western Division) RA. The unit's HQ transferred from Hartlepool to Sunderland Barracks in 1895.[22]

For the first and only time, the militia battalions would not only be embodied, but also see action during the Second Boer War. The 3rd battalion was embodied on 5 December 1899, with a strength of 826 officers and men. It served in the Cape Colony and the Orange Free State, guarding lines of communication and escorting convoys, and garrisoning Dewetsdorp for six months. During its time there it lost 29 officers and men. The 4th battalion was embodied twice, first from 23 January to 4 December 1900, when it remained in Aldershot, and from 6 January 1902 to 3 October 1902 when, with a strength of 852 officers and men, it was split into small detachments around the Cape and Free State. The 4th lost 16 men.[32] The Durham Artillery was embodied 1 May to 11 October 1900, a Service Company volunteered for overseas service and was sent to Zululand where they distinguished themselves fighting as infantry in the defence of Fort Prospect.[22]

From 1902 most units of the Militia artillery formally became part of the Royal Garrison Artillery, the unit at Sunderland taking the title of The Durham RGA (M).[22]

Haldane Reforms edit

In 1908, in large part due to the Militias' resistance to more reform, the militia were reduced to the Special Reserve, a draft finding and training organisation, by the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907.[33] Now renamed the "Reserve" (and if a second battalion existed an "Extra Reserve"), the militia battalion would take over the running of the regimental Depot, being part of the local garrison. War office plans for the 3rd battalion to stay in the depot and any 4th battalion to be mobilized for action, led to the two Durham battalions swapping numbers, as the older battalion wished to remain as a fighting unit. Both battalions remained in Britain during World War I.[c] They were not reformed after the war, the role of the original militia no longer existing, and were finally disbanded after a long period of suspended animation in 1953.

Although most of the Durham RGA (M) volunteered to transfer to the Special Reserve Royal Field Artillery, these units were disbanded in March 1909.[22]

Volunteers edit

Durham Fencibles and Volunteers
 
Home Service Helmet badge of the 2nd (Administrative battalion) Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps, pre 1881 from the Durham Light Infantry museum
Active1758—1908
Disbanded1968
CountryGreat Britain
United Kingdom
BranchVolunteers
TypeArtillery, Cavalry, Infantry
SizeOne Battalion 1758—1761
Multiple platoon to company size units 1792—1816
Five battalions 1861—1908
EngagementsBattle of Arklow
Second Boer War

It was initially intended in an Act of 1778 to permit volunteers to augment the militia, however only 14 companies had been added nationwide by 1780.[35] In 1782 a new act, 22 Geo. 3. c.79,[36] allowed raising of volunteer forces by local subscription, with a wealthy land-owners or businessman providing most of the funding, but with the government paying them for any service and allowing the men to be court-marshalled only under volunteer officers.

Early Volunteers and Fencibles edit

The first "modern" raising of volunteers in County Durham occurred in 1745 during the Jacobite Rebellion when the neglect of the militia in previous years meant that, in effect, there was none.[37] The Durham Association Regiment was raised in September by George Bowes and consisted of six troops of cavalry of 25 to 30 men each. It was disbanded by the authorities in November due to its over-zealous patrolling and the inhibition of the movements of "Papists and Non-Jurors".[38]

During the Revolutionary Wars the county would raise two Fencible regiments, composed of volunteers under regular officers, they could not be sent overseas.[39] The first raised in 1794 was the Durham Fencible Cavalry, changing its name the next year to the Princess of Wales's Fencible Cavalry as a genuine expression of loyalty. It was led by William Vane, who was also Colonel of the Militia. After spending three years in Scotland, in June 1798 it was sent to Ireland with a strength of around 250 men, where it operated against the Irish rebels on the River Boyne, it was disbanded at Clonmel in September 1800.[40] The second regiment was raised in 1795, the Loyal Durham Regiment of Fencible Infantry, and after spending time in Gurnsey was sent to Ireland in May 1797.[40] Sent to Dublin from Ulster when the rebellion broke out, some 315 of them were sent to Arklow in impressed carriages, arriving there a few hours before the battle. Here, under their fiery commander, Colonel John Skerrett, they formed a line South of the Coolgreany Road and with the two battalion guns they had brought with them, aided the militia and regulars in beating back the rebels. It was disbanded in 1802.[41]

Volunteer Corps edit

 
Officer's coatee button of the Teesdale Volunteer Infantry c.1800s from the Durham Light Infantry museum

Volunteer recruitment early on in the Revolutionary wars proceeded slowly, mostly in the counties most likely to face an invasion.[42] Even with the right to avoid the militia ballot, it remained slow until boosted by the act of 1798 (38 Geo. 3. c. 27, called the 'Defence of the Realm act') which allowed the raising of "Armed Associations".[43][44] These were again raised by local subscription, with the local gentry or a rich businessman providing the bulk of the capital who often then commanded the formation. The rank of commandant depended on the number of men in the formation, two or three score for a Captain-commandant, up to 500 for a Lt. Colonel-commandant.[45]

The first to form was the Sunderland Loyal Volunteers in 1794 by Robert Hayton, and consisted of three companies of 100 men, many of whom were Keelmen. Disbanded in 1802 they were re-raised in 1803 and disbanded in 1812.[46]

The large numbers of volunteers encouraged by Pitt's 1798 Act formed many small units in County Durham, as listed below:[47]

  • South Shields Volunteer Infantry (1797—1802), commanded by Major-commandant Sir Cuthbert Heron
    • re-raised 1803 as the 1st (disbanded 1813) and 2nd (1812) South Shields Volunteer Infantry
  • Easington Ward Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry (1798—1802), raised by Rowland Burdon
  • North Durham Gentlemen and Yeomanry (1798—1810), raised by Sir Carnaby Haggerston, Bart
    • renamed in 1803 as the North Durham Troop of Volunteer Cavalry, disbanded in 1810
  • Staindrop Gentlemen and Yeomanry (1798—1815), raised by John Ingram
    • renamed as the Staindrop Troop of Volunteer Cavalry, disbanded in 1815
  • Usworth Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry (1798—1802), raised by Thomas Wade
    • re-raised 1803 as part of the Loyal Unsworth Legion
  • Sunderland Artillery Volunteers (1798—1802), commanded by Captain-commandant Thomas Scarth
    • re-raised 1803
  • Hartlepool Volunteer Artillery (1798—1802), raised by Charles Spearmans as Major-commandant
    • re-raised 1803
  • City of Durham Loyal Volunteers (Infantry) (1798—1802), commanded by Captain-commandant Howden Philipson Rowe
  • Gateshead Volunteer Infantry (1798—1802), commanded Captain-commandant Robert Shafto Hawkes
    • re-raised 1803, disbanded in 1813
  • Bishopwearmouth Independent Cavalry [48](Cavalry) (1798—1802)raised by John Goodchild as Captain-commandant
  • The Gibside Volunteer Associated Troops of Cavalry (1799—1802) raised by John Bowes.
    • re-raised in 1804 as part of the Derwent Legion.
  • Durham Light Horse Association (1798—1802), commanded by Henry Methold.
  • Loyal Axwell Volunteer Association (Cavalry) (1798—1802), raised by Sir Thomas Clavering.
    • re-raised in 1803 as the Axwell Yeomanry Cavalry disbanded in 1814.
  • Durham Volunteer Association (Infantry) (1798—1802), raised by John Ralph Fenwick.
    • re-raised 1804 as the Durham Volunteer Infantry, commanded by Lt. Colonel-commandant John Ralph Fenwick, disbanded in 1813.
  • Stockton Volunteer Association (Infantry) (1798—1799), organised by Rowland Webster, became the Stockton Volunteer Infantry (1799—1802), commanded by Captain-commandant John Allison.
    • re-raised 1803 disbanded in 1813.
  • Darlington Volunteer Infantry (1799—1802), raised and commanded by Major-commandant John Trotter.
    • re-raised 1803 as part of the Darlington Legion.

Under the threat of conscription into the militia by the Levy en masse if sufficient numbers were not raised, and the inducement of exemption from the militia ballot if a man joined a volunteer corps before 22 July, the volunteers reformed with even greater numbers in 1803.[49][50] Most of the previous units were reformed, with some joining together with other new or enlarged units to form mixed infantry and cavalry "Legions".[51]

  • Darlington Legion raised in 1803 by John Trotter with and an enlarged Darlington Volunteer Infantry of six companies and two troops of cavalry.
    • split into the Darlington Volunteer Infantry and Darlington Cavalry in 1806.
  • Derwent Legion (1803—1813), raised by the 10th Earl of Strathmore, and incorporating the re-raised Gibside Cavalry troop and a new infantry corps of six companies. The infantry were disbanded at the end of 1813.
  • Loyal Unsworth Legion (1803—1808) raised by Thomas Wade with a squadron of four troops of the Unsworth Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry and four new companies of infantry
    • split into the South Tyne Volunteer Infantry and the South Tyne Volunteer Cavalry.

Other new corps raised in 1803:[52]

  • Durham Volunteer Cavalry raised and commanded by Major-commandant Arthur Mowbray.
  • Chester-le-Street Volunteer Artillery and Infantry raised by Luke Colling, three companies strong, disbanded in 1811.
  • Teesdale Volunteer Infantry absorbed into the Local Militia in 1809.[53]

Local Militia edit

Due to the large numbers of small Volunteer units, and the radical politics of a number of them around the country, they were encouraged to merge into larger Local Militia battalions by the gradual withdrawal of financial support.[45]

  • 1st Durham Local Militia formed in 1809 around the Darlington and Teesdale volunteers, disbanded in 1816
  • 2nd Durham Local Militia formed in 1812 around the Sunderland and South Tyne volunteers, also disbanded in 1816.

Yeomanry edit

Towards the end of the war many of the cavalry corps merged into Yeomanry Regiments used to keep the peace. These were:[54]

  • the South Tyne Yeomanry (Usworth and Axwell cavalry)
  • the Durham Yeomanry (Gibside, Staindrop and Durham cavalry)
  • the Darlington Independent Yeomanry (Darlinton cavalry)

Aside for training and exercising, none were called out, except for those in the North of the County in 1804 for a false alarm, and by 1818 all of the infantry, cavalry and artillery volunteers had disbanded.[55]

Rifle Volunteers edit

 
Slouch hat of the 2nd Volunteer Battalion DLI, 1904-1908 from the Durham Light Infantry museum

In another invasion scare in 1859 circulars were issued by the government based on the provisions of the 1804 Volunteer Consolidation act for the raising of corps of volunteers in the counties.[56] As an inducement 25 Enfield rifles were to be issued by the government for every 100 volunteers,[57] with a corps needing 60 men (effectives) to become established, and candidates for membership having to be approved by the corps committee.[58] In addition to finding the cost of the uniform and equipment (weapon included), an average of £10,[59] a subscription was payable:[60]

  • Effectives, 10/- (10 shillings) a year (assistance for the uniform and equipment from the general fund if required)
  • Honorary members, £1 a year, found their own uniform and drilled as often as possible
  • non-effective, subscriber only

The "effectives" were the backbone of the corps. As the volunteer corps were predominantly middle class, this placed them in direct competition with the non balloted militia and enticed many of the landed gentry in search of commissions away and left the militia almost the preserve of the working class.[59] The volunteer corps, each under the title of Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps (RVC), formed in County Durham by February 1861 were:[61][62][63][64]

In August 1861 the corps were grouped (on paper) into Administrative battalions:[65][66]

  • 1st (7th, 10th, 11th, 13th and 14th corps) with headquarters in Durham
  • 2nd (1st, 4th, 12th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th) with headquarters in Bishop Auckland
  • 3rd (6th, 8th and 9th) with headquarters in Gateshead

The 3rd (Sunderland) Corps was large enough not to join with other corps, being five companies strong.[67] In December the 4th Administrative Battalion was formed from the 1st, 15th, 16th and 19th corps taken from the 2nd Administrative Battalion.[66][64]

In April 1862 the strength of the Durham Volunteer corps was:[68]

  • 1st Admin. battalion: 770 men in 11 companies
  • 2nd Admin. battalion: 407 men in 7 companies
  • 3rd Admin. battalion: 399 men in 6 companies
  • 4th Admin. battalion: 419 men in 7 companies
  • 3rd (Sunderland) Corps: 296 men in 5 companies

In 1863 the Lord Lieutenant of the county standardised the uniform to one of rifle green.[68] In November, the 7th Yorkshire (North Riding) RVC at Startforth moved to Barnard Castle and was renamed as the 21st Durham RVC in the 4th (later 2nd) Admin battalion.[66][64] In 1877 the 21st Yorkshire (North Riding) RVC at Middlesbrough also joined the 4th Admin Bn, without changing its designation.[64] There was little interaction between these battalions, [d] and the individual corps did not always prosper, the 10th, 14th, 17th and 18th corps dissolving by the end of the century and new ones, not always in the same location, replacing them.[61] The primary concern of many was solvency.[60]

Reform and Amalgamation edit

After being brigaded with the militia and the regulars' depot from 1873, but still having little interaction with them, and still with each other, in 1880 the Administrative battalions were renamed:[70]

  • The 1st Administrative battalion became the 4th Durham Rifle Volunteers
  • The 2nd Administrative battalion became the 2nd Durham Rifle Volunteers
  • The 3rd Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps became the 3rd Durham Rifle Volunteers
  • The 3rd Administrative battalion became the 6th Durham Rifle Volunteers (renumbered the 5th later in the year)
  • The 4th Administrative battalion became the 1st Durham Rifle Volunteers

In 1881 with the amalgamation of the regulars, militia and volunteers into the Durham Light Infantry, the use of regular officers (occasionally from the D.L.I.) as battalion adjutant began, beginning a closer connection to the regulars of the new territorial regiment.[71] In 1887 the Rifle Volunteers were renamed as Volunteer Battalions of the Durham Light Infantry with no change in numbering.[72] About this time annual battalion camps became usual.[67]

During the Boer War volunteers from the five battalions together provided four companies of 116 of all ranks, for one years service to reinforce the army in South Africa.[73] The first three reinforced, in sequence, their regular battalion from April 1900 to July 1902, the fourth reinforced the 2nd Buffs then the 2nd Northumberland Fusiliers from March 1901 to May 1902. These attachments greatly increased the connections between the volunteers and the county regiment,[74] and coupled with another invasion scare caused by the small numbers of regular troops left in the country, caused a surge in volunteer numbers.[75]

Artillery Volunteers edit

A number of Artillery Volunteer Corps (AVCs) were also raised at the same time as the Rifle Volunteers:[76][77]

In 1863 the 1st Durham AVC was attached to the larger 2nd (Seaham) AVC for administrative purposes, then in 1873 to the 1st Admin Brigade of Northumberland AVCs. It regained its independence in 1888.

The 2nd (Seaham) Durham AVC had all the other Durham AVCs attached to it until 1873, when the 1st, and 3rd joined other units, the 4th becoming independent in 1886.

The 3rd Durham AVC absorbed the 6th Durham Rifle Volunteers at South Shields in 1863. After leaving the 2nd (Seaham) AVC in 1873 the 3rd was attached to the 1st Newcastle-upon-Tyne Artillery Volunteers until it regained its independence in 1890.

All the Durham Artillery Volunteers became part of the Royal Garrison Artillery (Volunteers) in 1902.

Engineer Volunteers edit

 
1st Durham Engineer Volunteers tunic button.

A volunteer unit of the Royal Engineers was also raised:[78][79]

In 1869 the smaller 1st Newcastle upon Tyne EVC was attached to the unit, and from 1874 they were united in the 1st Admin Battalion, Durham Engineer Volunteers (later 1st Newcastle & Durham). In 1888 the battalion was split into three separate units: the 1st Durham RE (Volunteers), at Jarrow,[79] the Tyne Division RE (V), Submarine Miners and the 1st Newcastle-on-Tyne RE (V).[79]

The 1st Durham RE (V) sent a detachment of one officer and 25 other ranks to assist the regular REs during the Second Boer War in 1900, and a second section the following year.[80]

Haldane Reforms edit

As part of the reforms to the volunteers (the same Territorial and Reserve Forces Act of 1907 that affected the militia), and in return for increased financial support on an often heavy burden for the commanding officer, the volunteer would undertake a regular annual camp and a training obligation of six months if mobilised, with the volunteer battalions coming under the control of the newly formed county association.[81] As the reforms were announced and debated in the prelude to the formation of the Territorial Force there was a fall in numbers joining the volunteers.[82]

On 31 March 1908 the Volunteer Force was dissolved and the next day the Territorial Force put in place with the volunteer battalions under the control of the county associations. The volunteer battalions were renumbered, in sequence after the old militia battalions: in County Durham as the 5th to 9th Battalions of the Durham Light Infantry. They were formed into part of the Northumbrian Division, with the 5th battalion in the York and Durham Brigade and the remainder comprising the Durham Light Infantry Brigade.[e]

Notes edit

  1. ^ As a cost saving measure as the regiments's number was incorporated into the uniform.[11]
  2. ^ In November 1808, Private Robert Innard was returning home from Portsmouth on sick leave, when the ship he was on was captured by French privateers. He escaped in January 1814.[19]
  3. ^ Only 5 out of 23 of the "Extra Reserve" battalions served overseas.[34]
  4. ^ Occasionally little interaction within corps! The Blaydon corps' two sections, Blaydon "down hillers" and Winlaton "up hillers", had a "falling out" in 1864 after which they secured separate drill grounds.[69]
  5. ^ The division and brigades would not be numbered until May 1915, receiving higher numbers than the more recently formed New Army formations.[83]

References edit

  1. ^ Beckett p. 63
  2. ^ a b Vane p. 288
  3. ^ Beckett p. 65
  4. ^ Beckett pp. 63-64
  5. ^ a b Beckett p. 67
  6. ^ Beckett p. 110
  7. ^ a b c d Ward p. 10
  8. ^ Vane pp. 288–296
  9. ^ Vane p. 289
  10. ^ Vane pp. 289–290
  11. ^ a b c Ward p. 9
  12. ^ Vane p. 290
  13. ^ Knight p. 79
  14. ^ Vane p. 291
  15. ^ Vane pp. 291-292
  16. ^ Vane p. 293
  17. ^ Vane p. 292
  18. ^ Vane p. 294
  19. ^ Knight p. 262 footnote
  20. ^ a b c Vane p. 296
  21. ^ Hart's Army List, 1840.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g Litchfield, pp. 71–7.
  23. ^ a b c Vane p. 297
  24. ^ Edinburgh Gazette, 7 June 1859.
  25. ^ Edinburgh Gazette, 5 July 1859.
  26. ^ Edinburgh Gazette, 6 December 1859.
  27. ^ a b Vane p. 298
  28. ^ Beckett p. 155
  29. ^ Beckett pp. 142-143
  30. ^ Beckett pp. 168-187
  31. ^ Ward pp.
  32. ^ Vane pp. 299-300
  33. ^ Beckett pp. 216-127
  34. ^ "The Long, Long Trail – Researching soldiers of the British Army in the Great War of 1914-1919".
  35. ^ Beckett p.69
  36. ^ "The Statutes at Large: From the Magna Charta, to the End of the Eleventh Parliament of Great Britain, Anno 1761 [continued to 1807]". 1782.
  37. ^ Beckett pp. 57-58
  38. ^ Ward pp.15-16
  39. ^ Ward p.11
  40. ^ a b Ward p. 12
  41. ^ Ward pp.12-15
  42. ^ Knight p. 80
  43. ^ Knight p. 81
  44. ^ Beckett p. 81
  45. ^ a b Ward p. 21
  46. ^ Ward p. 16
  47. ^ Ward pp. 16—18
  48. ^ name on surviving helmet in Sunderland Museum's Collection
  49. ^ Knight p. 262
  50. ^ Beckett p. 100
  51. ^ Ward pp. 18-20
  52. ^ Ward p. 20
  53. ^ Durham Light infantry Museum
  54. ^ Ward pp. 18-21
  55. ^ Ward p. 22
  56. ^ Beckett pp. 164-167
  57. ^ Beckett p. 167
  58. ^ Ward p. 262
  59. ^ a b Beckett p. 170
  60. ^ a b Ward p. 258
  61. ^ a b Ward pp. 259-261
  62. ^ Vane p. 304
  63. ^ Beckett, Riflemen,Appendix VII.
  64. ^ a b c d Westlake, Rifle Volunteers, pp. 74–8.
  65. ^ Ward pp. 262-263
  66. ^ a b c Vane p. 305
  67. ^ a b Ward p. 263
  68. ^ a b Vane p. 306
  69. ^ Ward p. 260
  70. ^ Vane pp.306-307
  71. ^ Ward p. 264
  72. ^ Vane p. 307
  73. ^ Beckett p. 202
  74. ^ Ward pp. 264-265
  75. ^ Beckett p. 205
  76. ^ Beckett, Riflemen, Appendix VIII.
  77. ^ Litchfield & Westlake, pp. 59–61.
  78. ^ Beckett, Riflemen, Appendix IX.
  79. ^ a b c Westlake, Engineers, p. 7.
  80. ^ Watson, pp. 42–3.
  81. ^ Beckett pp. 214-215
  82. ^ Beckett p. 217
  83. ^ Wyrall p. 54

Bibliography edit

  • Beckett, Ian F.W., Riflemen Form: A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859–1908, Aldershot: Ogilby Trusts, 1982, ISBN 0 85936 271 X.
  • Beckett, Ian F W (2011). Britain's Part Time Soldiers. The Amateur Military Tradition 1558—1945 (2 ed.). Barnsley: Pen & Sword. ISBN 9781848843950.
  • Clive Dunn, The Fighting Pioneers: the Story of the 7th Durham Light Infantry, Barnsley: Pen & Sword, 2015, ISBN 978-1-47382-348-8.
  • Knight, Roger (2014). Britain Against Napoleon. The Organization of Victory 1793—1815 (1 ed.). London: Penguin Books. ISBN 9780141038940.
  • Litchfield, Norman E.H., The Militia Artillery 1852–1909 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1987, ISBN 0-9508205-1-2.
  • Litchfield, Norman & Westlake, Ray, The Volunteer Artillery 1859–1908 (Their Lineage, Uniforms and Badges), Nottingham: Sherwood Press, 1982, ISBN 0-9508205-0-4.
  • Vane W L 1914 (2009) The Durham Light Infantry. The United Red and White Rose Naval and Military Press ISBN 978-1-84574-146-4
  • Ward, S G P 1962 Faithful. The Story of the Durham Light Infantry Naval and Military Press ISBN 9781845741471
  • Watson, Col Sir Charles M., History of the Corps of Royal Engineers, Vol III, Chatham: Institution of Royal Engineers, reprint 1954.
  • Westlake, R.A., Royal Engineers (Volunteers) 1859–1908, Wembley: R.A. Westlake, 1983, ISBN 0-9508530-0-3.
  • Westlake, R.A., Tracing the Rifle Volunteers, Barnsley: Pen and Sword, 2010, ISBN 978-1-84884-211-3.
  • Wyrall, Everard (1939). The Fiftheth Division 1914—1919 (1 ed.). Uckfield: The Naval and Military Press. ISBN 9781843422068.

militia, volunteers, county, durham, those, military, units, raised, county, independent, regular, army, modern, militia, dates, from, legislation, enacted, during, seven, years, volunteers, several, forms, separate, periods, existence, until, made, permanent,. The Militia and Volunteers of County Durham are those military units raised in the County independent of the regular Army The modern militia dates from legislation enacted during the Seven Years War The volunteers had several forms and separate periods of existence until made a permanent body in 1859 Contents 1 Militia 1 1 General militia 1 2 1852 Reformed Militia 1 3 Reforms and Amalgamation 1 4 Haldane Reforms 2 Volunteers 2 1 Early Volunteers and Fencibles 2 2 Volunteer Corps 2 3 Local Militia 2 4 Yeomanry 2 5 Rifle Volunteers 2 6 Reform and Amalgamation 2 7 Artillery Volunteers 2 8 Engineer Volunteers 2 9 Haldane Reforms 3 Notes 4 References 5 BibliographyMilitia editDurham Militia nbsp Shako plate of the Durham Militia 1850s from the Durham Light Infantry museumActive1759 1908Disbanded1953CountryGreat BritainUnited KingdomBranchMilitiaTypeInfantrySizeOne Battalion to 1859Two Battalions to 1908EngagementsSecond Boer War After the invasion scare of 1745 and the later strain on the regular army during the Seven Years War bills for the reform of the militia were brought to Parliament but it was not until 1759 that the act would be passed 30 Geo 2 c 25 1 2 The act continued with the ballot to select men from each county in numbers based on a return made by the county authorities of men of eligible age initially between 18 and 50 years of age As a substitute could be made on payment of 10 the burden fell on the working classes 3 Subsequent explanatory legislation was required to curb rioting in 13 counties over fears of pay and overseas service the militia would only be used in England and Wales 4 When not embodied mobilised for service the men had an annual training requirement of 28 days by 1762 5 The Legislation was continually amended for example by the end of the Napoleonic wars to permit wider service in the country fixed terms of service and paying a bounty for volunteering for the regular army 6 The militia was under the control of the Lord Lieutenant of the county and was to be officered by the local gentry their rank determined by a property qualification which was gradually reduced or ignored 5 7 General militia edit For local militia see Voluteer Corps nbsp Officer s coatee button of the Durham Militia c 1850s from the Durham Light Infantry museumThe regiment of the Durham Militia did not form until 1759 it was led by Henry Vane 2nd Earl of Darlington and had an initial strength of 369 men with the headquarters at Barnard Castle the Vanes lived nearby in Raby Castle The first bandmaster of the regiment was William Herschel 2 The militia regiment in its early form was embodied on the following occasions 8 During the Seven Years War from 22 February 1760 to early 1763 it served briefly at Pontefract 9 where in November 1761 it had a strength of 23 Officers 16 Serjeants 16 Drummers and 396 Other ranks formed in eight companies The uniforms had green facings 7 During the American Revolutionary War from 26 March 1778 to 1783 when France had joined the Americans it served locally in Scarborough and Whitby and was composed of six companies 10 It was ranked 44th in order of militia precedence by drawing of lots annually in June 1778 then 30th 35th 32nd and 44th 11 The uniforms had purple facings 12 During the French Revolutionary Wars from end 1792 until May 1802 the regiment was tasked with maintaining order as well as anti invasion duties and for this purpose they were employed outside of their area of recruitment and kept on the move so as to avoid fraternization with the local population 13 On the death of Henry Vane in 1792 the regiment was led by his son William Vane 1st Duke of Cleveland 14 The regiment was moved at regular intervals Whitby 1793 where it had a strength of 289 all ranks Scarborough 1794 Morpeth and Alnwick 1795 Yarmouth 1796 where it had 14 officers 20 serjeants 20 corporals 12 drummers 375 privates Then to Hull 1797 where the establishment raised to 1300 and the strength rose to 800 men Burstwick camp 1798 now 1200 men strong where large numbers volunteer for the regular army and by the end of 1799 the strength had fallen to 439 all ranks Lastly back to Yarmouth 1800 Sunderland 1801 and Barnard Castle in 1802 to disband 15 For this whole embodiment it was ranked 10th in order of precedence in lots drawn in 1793 a the uniform for which had buff or pale yellow facings 7 Less than a year later after the short lived Peace of Amiens the regiment was once again embodied from March 1803 to August 1814 during the Napoleonic Wars with an initial strength of 14 officers 26 serjeants 9 drummers 401 rank and file 16 and was ranked 25th in order of precedence in lots drawn in 1803 11 the uniform had white facings 7 The regiment was station in Hull 1803 Chelmsford Barracks 1804 escorting French prisoners to and guarding them at Norman Cross Barracks 1805 Woodbridge Barracks 1806 Portsmouth 1808 where some 168 men joined the 68th Regiment and others the 43rd Regiment and the 53rd Regiment they also suppressed a rising of prisoners on board a prison ship 17 They stayed in Sunderland for two years before moving North to Musselburgh 1812 Perth 1813 and Glasgow in 1814 returning to Barnard Castle to disband later that year 18 b After Napoleon escaped from Elba the regiment was once more embodied from 14 July 1815 to 28 February 1816 it was much weaker with initially only 25 officers 18 serjeants 9 drummers 156 rank and file It served in Glasgow where by the end of 1815 its strength had risen to 232 other ranks The regiment was disbanded at Barnard Castle on 28 February 1816 20 The last annual training for balloted men was in 1825 and was held only once or twice in the next few years as the militia was allowed to fall into disuse and the Durham militia dwindled to only a small headquarters staff At the end of 1833 this amounted to a captain a serjeant major the captain s son 12 serjeants a drum major and four drummers and by 1844 was only the serjeant major and six serjeants 20 In 1840 the Colonelcy of the Durham Militia was held by William Vane 1st Duke of Cleveland and after his death in 1842 it passed on to his son Henry Vane 2nd Duke of Cleveland 20 21 1852 Reformed Militia edit nbsp Band boy s tunic button of the North Durham Militia c 1860s from the Durham Light Infantry museumIn 1852 a new Militia Act was passed that revived the militia and County Durham was ordered to provide 1096 men or 2000 men including artillery 22 However with the ballot having been suppressed in 1830 the response was weak The first recruits were trained in two batches at Barnard Castle at the end of the year 23 In 1853 the existing Durham Militia was split into two regiments the 1st or South Durham Militia with its headquarters at Barnard Castle and the 2nd or North Durham Militia headquartered in Durham An artillery brigade of four later five batteries the Durham Artillery Militia was newly raised at Bishop Auckland in July 1853 moving its headquarters to Hartlepool in 1861 23 22 During the Crimean War both infantry regiments were embodied the 1st regiment from December 1855 to May 1856 which remained at Barnard Castle and the 2nd regiment from March 1855 to May 1856 which spent the last few months at Burnley Both were understrength with a total of 630 man of all ranks between them 23 neither were among those embodied during the manpower shortage caused by the Indian Mutiny However the Durham Artillery Militia were embodied during the latter stages of the Mutiny from 5 April 1859 to 25 March 1861 serving in the garrison of Gosport and Portsmouth 22 24 25 26 In 1860 the 1st regiment was made a Fusilier regiment the 1st Durham Fusilier Militia 27 The revival of the Volunteer forces led to competition for the available manpower 28 The rise of local constabularies meant that the militia would be used less for keeping order than to replace regular soldiers on home service during large mobilizations 29 Reforms and Amalgamation edit Main article Cardwell ReformsMain article Childers Reforms New legislation increased ease with which militia officers and men could transfer to the regular army and resulted it becoming as Cardwell wanted more of an auxiliary to the regular line regiments 30 In 1881 after being brigaded with but seldom interacting with the Volunteer units of the County since 1873 the 1st Durham Fusilier Militia became the 3rd Militia Battalion and the 2nd North Durham Militia became the 4th Militia Battalion of the newly created Durham Light Infantry 31 The 3rd battalion was embodied for six months in 1885 as a consequence of the Mahdist War and was stationed at Colchester 27 The nation s Artillery Militia was reorganised into 11 divisions of garrison artillery in 1882 and the Durham unit with a sixth battery became the senior Militia unit in the new Northern Division taking the title of 2nd Brigade Northern Division RA the 1st Brigade comprised the Regular RA units of the division When the Northern Division was abolished in 1889 the title was altered to The Durham Artillery Western Division RA The unit s HQ transferred from Hartlepool to Sunderland Barracks in 1895 22 For the first and only time the militia battalions would not only be embodied but also see action during the Second Boer War The 3rd battalion was embodied on 5 December 1899 with a strength of 826 officers and men It served in the Cape Colony and the Orange Free State guarding lines of communication and escorting convoys and garrisoning Dewetsdorp for six months During its time there it lost 29 officers and men The 4th battalion was embodied twice first from 23 January to 4 December 1900 when it remained in Aldershot and from 6 January 1902 to 3 October 1902 when with a strength of 852 officers and men it was split into small detachments around the Cape and Free State The 4th lost 16 men 32 The Durham Artillery was embodied 1 May to 11 October 1900 a Service Company volunteered for overseas service and was sent to Zululand where they distinguished themselves fighting as infantry in the defence of Fort Prospect 22 From 1902 most units of the Militia artillery formally became part of the Royal Garrison Artillery the unit at Sunderland taking the title of The Durham RGA M 22 Haldane Reforms edit Main article Haldane Reforms In 1908 in large part due to the Militias resistance to more reform the militia were reduced to the Special Reserve a draft finding and training organisation by the Territorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907 33 Now renamed the Reserve and if a second battalion existed an Extra Reserve the militia battalion would take over the running of the regimental Depot being part of the local garrison War office plans for the 3rd battalion to stay in the depot and any 4th battalion to be mobilized for action led to the two Durham battalions swapping numbers as the older battalion wished to remain as a fighting unit Both battalions remained in Britain during World War I c They were not reformed after the war the role of the original militia no longer existing and were finally disbanded after a long period of suspended animation in 1953 Although most of the Durham RGA M volunteered to transfer to the Special Reserve Royal Field Artillery these units were disbanded in March 1909 22 Volunteers editDurham Fencibles and Volunteers nbsp Home Service Helmet badge of the 2nd Administrative battalion Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps pre 1881 from the Durham Light Infantry museumActive1758 1908Disbanded1968CountryGreat BritainUnited KingdomBranchVolunteersTypeArtillery Cavalry InfantrySizeOne Battalion 1758 1761Multiple platoon to company size units 1792 1816Five battalions 1861 1908EngagementsBattle of ArklowSecond Boer War It was initially intended in an Act of 1778 to permit volunteers to augment the militia however only 14 companies had been added nationwide by 1780 35 In 1782 a new act 22 Geo 3 c 79 36 allowed raising of volunteer forces by local subscription with a wealthy land owners or businessman providing most of the funding but with the government paying them for any service and allowing the men to be court marshalled only under volunteer officers Early Volunteers and Fencibles edit Main article Fencibles The first modern raising of volunteers in County Durham occurred in 1745 during the Jacobite Rebellion when the neglect of the militia in previous years meant that in effect there was none 37 The Durham Association Regiment was raised in September by George Bowes and consisted of six troops of cavalry of 25 to 30 men each It was disbanded by the authorities in November due to its over zealous patrolling and the inhibition of the movements of Papists and Non Jurors 38 During the Revolutionary Wars the county would raise two Fencible regiments composed of volunteers under regular officers they could not be sent overseas 39 The first raised in 1794 was the Durham Fencible Cavalry changing its name the next year to the Princess of Wales s Fencible Cavalry as a genuine expression of loyalty It was led by William Vane who was also Colonel of the Militia After spending three years in Scotland in June 1798 it was sent to Ireland with a strength of around 250 men where it operated against the Irish rebels on the River Boyne it was disbanded at Clonmel in September 1800 40 The second regiment was raised in 1795 the Loyal Durham Regiment of Fencible Infantry and after spending time in Gurnsey was sent to Ireland in May 1797 40 Sent to Dublin from Ulster when the rebellion broke out some 315 of them were sent to Arklow in impressed carriages arriving there a few hours before the battle Here under their fiery commander Colonel John Skerrett they formed a line South of the Coolgreany Road and with the two battalion guns they had brought with them aided the militia and regulars in beating back the rebels It was disbanded in 1802 41 Volunteer Corps edit Main article British Volunteer Corps nbsp Officer s coatee button of the Teesdale Volunteer Infantry c 1800s from the Durham Light Infantry museumVolunteer recruitment early on in the Revolutionary wars proceeded slowly mostly in the counties most likely to face an invasion 42 Even with the right to avoid the militia ballot it remained slow until boosted by the act of 1798 38 Geo 3 c 27 called the Defence of the Realm act which allowed the raising of Armed Associations 43 44 These were again raised by local subscription with the local gentry or a rich businessman providing the bulk of the capital who often then commanded the formation The rank of commandant depended on the number of men in the formation two or three score for a Captain commandant up to 500 for a Lt Colonel commandant 45 The first to form was the Sunderland Loyal Volunteers in 1794 by Robert Hayton and consisted of three companies of 100 men many of whom were Keelmen Disbanded in 1802 they were re raised in 1803 and disbanded in 1812 46 The large numbers of volunteers encouraged by Pitt s 1798 Act formed many small units in County Durham as listed below 47 South Shields Volunteer Infantry 1797 1802 commanded by Major commandant Sir Cuthbert Heron re raised 1803 as the 1st disbanded 1813 and 2nd 1812 South Shields Volunteer Infantry Easington Ward Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry 1798 1802 raised by Rowland Burdon North Durham Gentlemen and Yeomanry 1798 1810 raised by Sir Carnaby Haggerston Bart renamed in 1803 as the North Durham Troop of Volunteer Cavalry disbanded in 1810 Staindrop Gentlemen and Yeomanry 1798 1815 raised by John Ingram renamed as the Staindrop Troop of Volunteer Cavalry disbanded in 1815 Usworth Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry 1798 1802 raised by Thomas Wade re raised 1803 as part of the Loyal Unsworth Legion Sunderland Artillery Volunteers 1798 1802 commanded by Captain commandant Thomas Scarth re raised 1803 Hartlepool Volunteer Artillery 1798 1802 raised by Charles Spearmans as Major commandant re raised 1803 City of Durham Loyal Volunteers Infantry 1798 1802 commanded by Captain commandant Howden Philipson Rowe Gateshead Volunteer Infantry 1798 1802 commanded Captain commandant Robert Shafto Hawkes re raised 1803 disbanded in 1813 Bishopwearmouth Independent Cavalry 48 Cavalry 1798 1802 raised by John Goodchild as Captain commandant The Gibside Volunteer Associated Troops of Cavalry 1799 1802 raised by John Bowes re raised in 1804 as part of the Derwent Legion Durham Light Horse Association 1798 1802 commanded by Henry Methold Loyal Axwell Volunteer Association Cavalry 1798 1802 raised by Sir Thomas Clavering re raised in 1803 as the Axwell Yeomanry Cavalry disbanded in 1814 Durham Volunteer Association Infantry 1798 1802 raised by John Ralph Fenwick re raised 1804 as the Durham Volunteer Infantry commanded by Lt Colonel commandant John Ralph Fenwick disbanded in 1813 Stockton Volunteer Association Infantry 1798 1799 organised by Rowland Webster became the Stockton Volunteer Infantry 1799 1802 commanded by Captain commandant John Allison re raised 1803 disbanded in 1813 Darlington Volunteer Infantry 1799 1802 raised and commanded by Major commandant John Trotter re raised 1803 as part of the Darlington Legion Under the threat of conscription into the militia by the Levy en masse if sufficient numbers were not raised and the inducement of exemption from the militia ballot if a man joined a volunteer corps before 22 July the volunteers reformed with even greater numbers in 1803 49 50 Most of the previous units were reformed with some joining together with other new or enlarged units to form mixed infantry and cavalry Legions 51 Darlington Legion raised in 1803 by John Trotter with and an enlarged Darlington Volunteer Infantry of six companies and two troops of cavalry split into the Darlington Volunteer Infantry and Darlington Cavalry in 1806 Derwent Legion 1803 1813 raised by the 10th Earl of Strathmore and incorporating the re raised Gibside Cavalry troop and a new infantry corps of six companies The infantry were disbanded at the end of 1813 Loyal Unsworth Legion 1803 1808 raised by Thomas Wade with a squadron of four troops of the Unsworth Gentlemen and Yeomanry Cavalry and four new companies of infantry split into the South Tyne Volunteer Infantry and the South Tyne Volunteer Cavalry Other new corps raised in 1803 52 Durham Volunteer Cavalry raised and commanded by Major commandant Arthur Mowbray Chester le Street Volunteer Artillery and Infantry raised by Luke Colling three companies strong disbanded in 1811 Teesdale Volunteer Infantry absorbed into the Local Militia in 1809 53 Local Militia edit Due to the large numbers of small Volunteer units and the radical politics of a number of them around the country they were encouraged to merge into larger Local Militia battalions by the gradual withdrawal of financial support 45 1st Durham Local Militia formed in 1809 around the Darlington and Teesdale volunteers disbanded in 1816 2nd Durham Local Militia formed in 1812 around the Sunderland and South Tyne volunteers also disbanded in 1816 Yeomanry edit Main article Yeomanry Towards the end of the war many of the cavalry corps merged into Yeomanry Regiments used to keep the peace These were 54 the South Tyne Yeomanry Usworth and Axwell cavalry the Durham Yeomanry Gibside Staindrop and Durham cavalry the Darlington Independent Yeomanry Darlinton cavalry Aside for training and exercising none were called out except for those in the North of the County in 1804 for a false alarm and by 1818 all of the infantry cavalry and artillery volunteers had disbanded 55 Rifle Volunteers edit Main article Volunteer Force Great Britain nbsp Slouch hat of the 2nd Volunteer Battalion DLI 1904 1908 from the Durham Light Infantry museumIn another invasion scare in 1859 circulars were issued by the government based on the provisions of the 1804 Volunteer Consolidation act for the raising of corps of volunteers in the counties 56 As an inducement 25 Enfield rifles were to be issued by the government for every 100 volunteers 57 with a corps needing 60 men effectives to become established and candidates for membership having to be approved by the corps committee 58 In addition to finding the cost of the uniform and equipment weapon included an average of 10 59 a subscription was payable 60 Effectives 10 10 shillings a year assistance for the uniform and equipment from the general fund if required Honorary members 1 a year found their own uniform and drilled as often as possible non effective subscriber onlyThe effectives were the backbone of the corps As the volunteer corps were predominantly middle class this placed them in direct competition with the non balloted militia and enticed many of the landed gentry in search of commissions away and left the militia almost the preserve of the working class 59 The volunteer corps each under the title of Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps RVC formed in County Durham by February 1861 were 61 62 63 64 1st Stockton formed on 27 February 1860 2nd not formed 3rd Sunderland 6 March 4th Bishop Auckland 24 May 5th not formed 6th South Shields 20 March 7th Durham 24 March 8th Gateshead 14 March 9th Blaydon 3 May 10th Beamish 12 May 11th Chester le Street 5 June 12th Middleton in Teesdale 14 July 13th Birtley 17 August 14th Felling 31 October 15th Darlington 6 October 16th Castle Eden 14 December 17th Wolsingham 24 November 18th Shotley Bridge 1 December 19th Hartlepool 26 January 1861 20th Stanhope 19 February 1861 In August 1861 the corps were grouped on paper into Administrative battalions 65 66 1st 7th 10th 11th 13th and 14th corps with headquarters in Durham 2nd 1st 4th 12th 15th 16th 17th 18th 19th and 20th with headquarters in Bishop Auckland 3rd 6th 8th and 9th with headquarters in GatesheadThe 3rd Sunderland Corps was large enough not to join with other corps being five companies strong 67 In December the 4th Administrative Battalion was formed from the 1st 15th 16th and 19th corps taken from the 2nd Administrative Battalion 66 64 In April 1862 the strength of the Durham Volunteer corps was 68 1st Admin battalion 770 men in 11 companies 2nd Admin battalion 407 men in 7 companies 3rd Admin battalion 399 men in 6 companies 4th Admin battalion 419 men in 7 companies 3rd Sunderland Corps 296 men in 5 companiesIn 1863 the Lord Lieutenant of the county standardised the uniform to one of rifle green 68 In November the 7th Yorkshire North Riding RVC at Startforth moved to Barnard Castle and was renamed as the 21st Durham RVC in the 4th later 2nd Admin battalion 66 64 In 1877 the 21st Yorkshire North Riding RVC at Middlesbrough also joined the 4th Admin Bn without changing its designation 64 There was little interaction between these battalions d and the individual corps did not always prosper the 10th 14th 17th and 18th corps dissolving by the end of the century and new ones not always in the same location replacing them 61 The primary concern of many was solvency 60 Reform and Amalgamation edit After being brigaded with the militia and the regulars depot from 1873 but still having little interaction with them and still with each other in 1880 the Administrative battalions were renamed 70 The 1st Administrative battalion became the 4th Durham Rifle Volunteers The 2nd Administrative battalion became the 2nd Durham Rifle Volunteers The 3rd Durham Rifle Volunteer Corps became the 3rd Durham Rifle Volunteers The 3rd Administrative battalion became the 6th Durham Rifle Volunteers renumbered the 5th later in the year The 4th Administrative battalion became the 1st Durham Rifle VolunteersIn 1881 with the amalgamation of the regulars militia and volunteers into the Durham Light Infantry the use of regular officers occasionally from the D L I as battalion adjutant began beginning a closer connection to the regulars of the new territorial regiment 71 In 1887 the Rifle Volunteers were renamed as Volunteer Battalions of the Durham Light Infantry with no change in numbering 72 About this time annual battalion camps became usual 67 During the Boer War volunteers from the five battalions together provided four companies of 116 of all ranks for one years service to reinforce the army in South Africa 73 The first three reinforced in sequence their regular battalion from April 1900 to July 1902 the fourth reinforced the 2nd Buffs then the 2nd Northumberland Fusiliers from March 1901 to May 1902 These attachments greatly increased the connections between the volunteers and the county regiment 74 and coupled with another invasion scare caused by the small numbers of regular troops left in the country caused a surge in volunteer numbers 75 Artillery Volunteers edit A number of Artillery Volunteer Corps AVCs were also raised at the same time as the Rifle Volunteers 76 77 1st formed at Sunderland on 14 March 1860 2nd Seaham formed at Seaham Colliery on 14 March 1860 3rd formed at South Shields on 14 March 1860 4th formed at West Hartlepool on 14 March 1860 5th Rainton to be raised at West Rainton in 1868 but never fully formed officers and men enlisted into 2nd Seaham AVC in 1869 In 1863 the 1st Durham AVC was attached to the larger 2nd Seaham AVC for administrative purposes then in 1873 to the 1st Admin Brigade of Northumberland AVCs It regained its independence in 1888 The 2nd Seaham Durham AVC had all the other Durham AVCs attached to it until 1873 when the 1st and 3rd joined other units the 4th becoming independent in 1886 The 3rd Durham AVC absorbed the 6th Durham Rifle Volunteers at South Shields in 1863 After leaving the 2nd Seaham AVC in 1873 the 3rd was attached to the 1st Newcastle upon Tyne Artillery Volunteers until it regained its independence in 1890 All the Durham Artillery Volunteers became part of the Royal Garrison Artillery Volunteers in 1902 Engineer Volunteers edit nbsp 1st Durham Engineer Volunteers tunic button A volunteer unit of the Royal Engineers was also raised 78 79 1st Durham EVC formed at Jarrow on 28 March 1868 In 1869 the smaller 1st Newcastle upon Tyne EVC was attached to the unit and from 1874 they were united in the 1st Admin Battalion Durham Engineer Volunteers later 1st Newcastle amp Durham In 1888 the battalion was split into three separate units the 1st Durham RE Volunteers at Jarrow 79 the Tyne Division RE V Submarine Miners and the 1st Newcastle on Tyne RE V 79 The 1st Durham RE V sent a detachment of one officer and 25 other ranks to assist the regular REs during the Second Boer War in 1900 and a second section the following year 80 Haldane Reforms edit As part of the reforms to the volunteers the same Territorial and Reserve Forces Act of 1907 that affected the militia and in return for increased financial support on an often heavy burden for the commanding officer the volunteer would undertake a regular annual camp and a training obligation of six months if mobilised with the volunteer battalions coming under the control of the newly formed county association 81 As the reforms were announced and debated in the prelude to the formation of the Territorial Force there was a fall in numbers joining the volunteers 82 On 31 March 1908 the Volunteer Force was dissolved and the next day the Territorial Force put in place with the volunteer battalions under the control of the county associations The volunteer battalions were renumbered in sequence after the old militia battalions in County Durham as the 5th to 9th Battalions of the Durham Light Infantry They were formed into part of the Northumbrian Division with the 5th battalion in the York and Durham Brigade and the remainder comprising the Durham Light Infantry Brigade e Notes edit As a cost saving measure as the regiments s number was incorporated into the uniform 11 In November 1808 Private Robert Innard was returning home from Portsmouth on sick leave when the ship he was on was captured by French privateers He escaped in January 1814 19 Only 5 out of 23 of the Extra Reserve battalions served overseas 34 Occasionally little interaction within corps The Blaydon corps two sections Blaydon down hillers and Winlaton up hillers had a falling out in 1864 after which they secured separate drill grounds 69 The division and brigades would not be numbered until May 1915 receiving higher numbers than the more recently formed New Army formations 83 References edit Beckett p 63 a b Vane p 288 Beckett p 65 Beckett pp 63 64 a b Beckett p 67 Beckett p 110 a b c d Ward p 10 Vane pp 288 296 Vane p 289 Vane pp 289 290 a b c Ward p 9 Vane p 290 Knight p 79 Vane p 291 Vane pp 291 292 Vane p 293 Vane p 292 Vane p 294 Knight p 262 footnote a b c Vane p 296 Hart s Army List 1840 a b c d e f g Litchfield pp 71 7 a b c Vane p 297 Edinburgh Gazette 7 June 1859 Edinburgh Gazette 5 July 1859 Edinburgh Gazette 6 December 1859 a b Vane p 298 Beckett p 155 Beckett pp 142 143 Beckett pp 168 187 Ward pp Vane pp 299 300 Beckett pp 216 127 The Long Long Trail Researching soldiers of the British Army in the Great War of 1914 1919 Beckett p 69 The Statutes at Large From the Magna Charta to the End of the Eleventh Parliament of Great Britain Anno 1761 continued to 1807 1782 Beckett pp 57 58 Ward pp 15 16 Ward p 11 a b Ward p 12 Ward pp 12 15 Knight p 80 Knight p 81 Beckett p 81 a b Ward p 21 Ward p 16 Ward pp 16 18 name on surviving helmet in Sunderland Museum s Collection Knight p 262 Beckett p 100 Ward pp 18 20 Ward p 20 Durham Light infantry Museum Ward pp 18 21 Ward p 22 Beckett pp 164 167 Beckett p 167 Ward p 262 a b Beckett p 170 a b Ward p 258 a b Ward pp 259 261 Vane p 304 Beckett Riflemen Appendix VII a b c d Westlake Rifle Volunteers pp 74 8 Ward pp 262 263 a b c Vane p 305 a b Ward p 263 a b Vane p 306 Ward p 260 Vane pp 306 307 Ward p 264 Vane p 307 Beckett p 202 Ward pp 264 265 Beckett p 205 Beckett Riflemen Appendix VIII Litchfield amp Westlake pp 59 61 Beckett Riflemen Appendix IX a b c Westlake Engineers p 7 Watson pp 42 3 Beckett pp 214 215 Beckett p 217 Wyrall p 54Bibliography editBeckett Ian F W Riflemen Form A Study of the Rifle Volunteer Movement 1859 1908 Aldershot Ogilby Trusts 1982 ISBN 0 85936 271 X Beckett Ian F W 2011 Britain s Part Time Soldiers The Amateur Military Tradition 1558 1945 2 ed Barnsley Pen amp Sword ISBN 9781848843950 Clive Dunn The Fighting Pioneers the Story of the 7th Durham Light Infantry Barnsley Pen amp Sword 2015 ISBN 978 1 47382 348 8 Knight Roger 2014 Britain Against Napoleon The Organization of Victory 1793 1815 1 ed London Penguin Books ISBN 9780141038940 Litchfield Norman E H The Militia Artillery 1852 1909 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1987 ISBN 0 9508205 1 2 Litchfield Norman amp Westlake Ray The Volunteer Artillery 1859 1908 Their Lineage Uniforms and Badges Nottingham Sherwood Press 1982 ISBN 0 9508205 0 4 Vane W L 1914 2009 The Durham Light Infantry The United Red and White Rose Naval and Military Press ISBN 978 1 84574 146 4 Ward S G P 1962 Faithful The Story of the Durham Light Infantry Naval and Military Press ISBN 9781845741471 Watson Col Sir Charles M History of the Corps of Royal Engineers Vol III Chatham Institution of Royal Engineers reprint 1954 Westlake R A Royal Engineers Volunteers 1859 1908 Wembley R A Westlake 1983 ISBN 0 9508530 0 3 Westlake R A Tracing the Rifle Volunteers Barnsley Pen and Sword 2010 ISBN 978 1 84884 211 3 Wyrall Everard 1939 The Fiftheth Division 1914 1919 1 ed Uckfield The Naval and Military Press ISBN 9781843422068 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Militia and Volunteers of County Durham amp oldid 1192132348 Volunteer Corps, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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